Louisiana Senate Kills Effort to Repeal Sodomy Law

An effort to repeal Louisiana’s 197-year-old sodomy law
failed in the state senate Tuesday evening, the latest in a series of
legislative and legal defeats stretching back several years. The effort,
sponsored by Sen. Lynn Dean (R-Braithwaite), would have legalized private
consensual sex acts that are otherwise illegal—what the current law calls a
“crime against nature.” The bill narrowly made it out of a senate
committee two weeks ago, but Tuesday’s defeat was decisive, even though no
one spoke against it. Last fall a state appeals court upheld the 19th-century
law.

Opponents of a repeal have traditionally linked the
measure to gay rights, making passage in a body with a large proportion of
members from conservative areas unlikely. During the committee hearings a
Louisiana Family Forum representative said repeal of the state’s sodomy law
would lead to disease and child abuse. Dean made only a brief speech Tuesday.
“When it’s done privately, they should have freedom to do this,” he
said. “This bill has nothing to do with children. Right now the only thing
standing between a substantial number of our Louisiana citizens and
prosecution” is the inclination of authorities not to pursue charges, Dean
said.